TY - SER KW - blast furnaces KW - steel industry KW - steel mills AU - Paul Armstrong AU - Winchell Smith AU - Frederic Thompson AB -
Two men battle at a Pittsburgh steel mill to control rights to a new, large-caliber, naval-gun contract and the affections of the steel magnate’s daughter. The core of the plot is the new Marconi radio transmitters that made possible ship rescues at sea.
C1 -1908
C2 -unpublished
C3 - Allegheny County; Pittsburgh C4 - Romance; War LA - English M3 - Playscript N1 -Frederic Thompson—the “Walt Disney” of American amusements—first created the idea for a wireless technological show called “Via Wireless” at his Luna Park on Coney Island. Its 1908 summer success inspired Thompson to hire two playwrights to expand it into a four-act play for Broadway, where it ran from November 1908 to January 1909, and then traveled the country.
N2 -Two men battle at a Pittsburgh steel mill to control rights to a new, large-caliber, naval-gun contract and the affections of the steel magnate’s daughter. The core of the plot is the new Marconi radio transmitters that made possible ship rescues at sea.
PY - 1908 RN -Paul Armstrong (1869-1915), born in Missouri, worked steam ships on the Great Lakes in the 1890s before becoming a playwright. He died in New York. Winchell Smith (1871-1933) was an actor, director, and playwright from Connecticut. He was the grandnephew of John Brown, the slavery abolitionist. Frederic Thompson (1873-1919) was born in Ironton, Ohio, the son of an English immigrant who managed steel mills, including a stint in Johnstown. After a short career in steel, he promoted world's fairs and carnival shows, then Luna Park and Manhattan's Hippodrome Theater. His huge success as an amusement park entrepreneur earned him the moniker “the boy who never grew up.”
TI - Via Wireless ER -